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The Real Effect of 'Reaganomics'
Ronald Reagan promoted the idea that conservatives prefer to leave the economy to the market. Nonsense – we've been gulled
At the 100th anniversary of Ronald Reagan's birth, his most important legacy has gone largely overlooked. Reagan helped to put a caricature of politics at the centre of the national debate and it remains there to this day. In Reagan's caricature, the central divide between progressives and conservatives is that progressives trust the government to make key decisions on production and distribution, while conservatives trust the market.
This framing of the debate is advantageous for the right, since people, especially in the United States, tend to be suspicious of an overly powerful government. They also like the idea of leaving important decisions to the seemingly natural workings of the market. It is therefore understandable that the right likes to frame its agenda this way. But since the right has no greater commitment to the market than the left, it is incredible that progressives are so foolish as to accept this framing.
In reality, the right uses government all the time to advance its interest by setting rules that redistribute income upward. As long as progressives ignore the rules that are designed to redistribute income upward, they will be left fighting over crumbs. There is no way that government interventions will reverse a rigged market. For some reason, most of the people in the national political debate who consider themselves progressive do not seem to understand this fact.
To take the most obvious example: fighting inflation has come to be seen as the holy grail of central banks – a policy that it is supposed to be outside of the realm of normal political debate. On slightly more careful inspection, the inflation-fighting by the Fed and other central banks is actually a policy that is designed to ensure that the wages of ordinary workers do not grow too rapidly.
When central banks jack up interest rates to tame inflation, the CEOs at Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan won't be out on the street. The people who lose their jobs will be factory workers, store clerks and other less privileged workers. Raising unemployment among the group of less educated workers keeps their wages down. In other words, controlling inflation is about making sure that the wages of less educated workers don't rise relative to the wages of more educated workers. And the central banks have a licence to push as hard as they like in this direction.
Incredibly, the vast majority of progressives go along with this central bank squeeze. They accept the absurd notion that this upward redistribution by the central banks is simply apolitical monetary policy and agree not to criticise the central bank. As a practical matter, there is nothing that Congress could plausibly do in the way of downward redistribution that would offset the upward redistribution from the Fed's tightening.
This is not the only policy lever that progressives are happy to turn over to conservatives. The exchange rate has enormous impact on the relative wages of workers who have been subjected to international competition through trade policy. If the dollar is overvalued by 20-30% against other currencies, then this is giving a subsidy to foreign producers relative to domestic ones of this magnitude.
Doctors and lawyers are smart enough to know that this sort of competition will drive down their wages and incomes. This is why they maintain strong barriers that prevent them from being subject to international competition in the same way as autoworkers and textile workers. Unfortunately, the people who represent ordinary workers fail to understand this simple point. Therefore, exchange rate policy rarely features prominently in political debates, even though it is another huge cause of the upward redistribution of income that we have seen over the last three decades.
Similarly, patent and copyright policy lock off large areas of the economy in monopolies assigned to large corporations and wealthy individuals. The United States now spends more than 2% of GDP, $300bn a year, on prescription drugs that would likely cost less than one tenth this much if they were sold in a competitive market. The $270bn handed to the drug companies each year through governmen- provided patent monopolies is five times as much money as what was at stake with the Bush tax cuts for the rich. Yet, here as well, progressives largely ignore patent and copyright policy.
The battles that occupy progressives' energies are almost invariably trivial in their impact – relative to these three fulcrums of the economy. In effect, conservatives have managed to gain control of the most important levers of economic activity and left the crumbs for progressives to fight over in the political sphere.
It would be very hard to challenge the right's control over these levers, but the first step is simply to recognise them. Unfortunately, there is little appreciation among progressives of their importance. Instead, we get great histrionics over policies that really won't have very much impact, even if they might be wrongheaded.
It seems that progressives have taken a pledge to be the Washington generals of national politics. The policies that have led to the most massive upward redistribution of income in the history of the world go largely unchallenged, while we argue endlessly over the Reagan-Bush tax breaks to the rich.

42 Comments so far
Show AllI see a glaring flaw here in that it seems to make the assumption that there are progressives in government. On this point, I would need some serious evidence.
Under out current political system, it's heads I win, tails you lose. I think that sums it up.
Reaganomics produced the most successful wealth transfer scam in US history.
The nineteenth century robber barons would be envious if they were still kicking.
hear hear
Reaganomics, the policies of a vain President who was almost deaf, refused to wear a hearing aid,also had Alzheimer's from his 1st term onward, not dementia yet, and initiated the huge deficits to fund the Pentagon with the Treasury bond proceeds of the national debt, which has been declared threat to national security by Admiral Mullen. Reaganism is to fund a threat to national security, the Pentagon, to protect US from threats to national security. This is Reaganomics concocted and implemented by a vain almost deaf President with Alzhiemer's which is in effect today and we, the USA, wonder why this country is bankrupt financially, spiritually, morally? Yeh, it's a real mystery!
Baker has performed an important service here. Conservatives don't want a free market any more than liberals do, what they want is a market rigged to benefit the wealthy. Such a market just 'naturally' accrues more money to the rich than to the poor and when the poor complain, they're engaging in communistic 'class warfare'. Bakers explanation of central banks inflation-fighting ability is an important revelation in this regard. And, as Baker notes, American laborers subject to globalized outsourcing has carefully avoided those at the right of American society. What do doctors, lawyers, top business managers, military sector employees and business owners all have in common? They are overwhelmingly Republican and overwhelmingly protected from globalization. Farmers likewise, with some exceptions. Sarah Palins Alaska gets $2.50 from the federal government for every $1.00 it sends back in taxes. It is also overwhelmingly Republican. Coincidence? I don't think so. If you make your money by the sweat of your brow, you pay 20-40% in income taxes. If you make your money by parking it in Google stock, you pay 15% in taxes. Sweet deal if you have capital to lean on rather than labor. Conservatives are not about the 'free market'. They are about the market rigged on behalf of conservatives.
Progressives need to begin talking in a different way. Its not a 'free market' when the finance sector is 'too big to fail', or when an insurance company can take your money when you're healthy and drop you over the fine print when you're sick. The markets are rigged, by conservatives, to benefit their backers. Many markets in America, hence, constitute theft and have for a long time.
Insider trading is illegal in America. Just ask any hedge fund...
and they get all these people believing that if they just work hard enough they too can be mega wealthy
and the only reason they aren't is because of all the government programs that helping working class and poor
who presumably are all extremely lazy
having lost their pensions, their salaries, their health insurance, and often their homes, who can they blame? Why, according to Faux News, the public employees unions! Why? because those guys still HAVE all that stuff. You know, the stuff that used to define the 'American Dream'?
But unions are bad. And what do you call it when 13 bankers go to Washington, and get them to bail them out for trillions of dollars of gambling losses? I call THAT collective bargaining! Faux, I'm sure, calls it American Enterprise...
duplicate
Gotta give the current herd of robber barrons credit, they have learned from the errors of those who went before them. The former didn't have to deal with mass information distribution and could keep their crimes relatively quiet while bribing those who would confront them. Today, that is impossible as it's all on the internet in one form or another. So what do they do? They reinvent reality and replace it with one where greed and instant gratification are really blessings from the universe on those that are deserving. The corporations confiscate our commons while dumping their trash in our environment. In return they offer us virtual reality.
It was brilliant. The moneyed ones had to convince those without that someday, they too could be where the blessed lived. Thus,if you're greedy, well heck, God is going to reward you cause that's why he put you on the Earth in the first place. It wasn't to help your brother or sister along, it was to beat them to first place. Watch Survivor lately? The lowest scum on the pond wins the million bucks. WTF? So all of this craziness can't be completely blamed on those who are taking the most advantage of it. It takes participation and attention from a whole lot of the populace to keep it going. So want to do something with long term benefit? Go cold turkey on the Television. It's probably the worst of the addictions that keep we here in the US apathetic and asleep.
"The corporations confiscate our commons while dumping their trash in our environment. In return they offer us virtual reality."
Beautifully well said. That encompasses it, in a nutshell. And what a beautiful virtual reality it is!
"Go cold turkey on the Television. It's probably the worst of the addictions that keep we here in the US apathetic"
Went cold turkey a bit over a year ago. Yup, I miss that warm-fuzzy babies-blanket every now and then. Took a look at a few of yesterdays Superbowl advertisements on the web and, for a moment, felt that old, familiar light. The one that said America was the golden land and we were all going to be able to afford an electric BMW in the near future, where we would put our Gecko and our talking baby, our sassy but cogent teens, and our cases of Bud-light. Then, it was over. And the BMW was a used Toyota, holding a homeless dog, an obese teen and her screaming baby, and cases of Colt 45. (OK, an exaggeration, but not compared to whats on TV. Have you noticed, how NONE of this years Superbowl ads is in any remote way REAL? It's like they don't want to even TALK about reality. REality is too, you know, REAL.)
The indoctrination of instilling mindlessness into the American psyche started in the 1920's with Walter Lippmann's theory, put into practice,of propaganda Manufacturing Consent as articulated by Noam Chomsky in his book. That's 90 years of perfecting the propaganda while gutting an public educational system since the 1960's. TV is the perfect instrument for instilling mindlessness which is institutionalized by the government, business and pretend christians[biblical harlots] which legitimizes it, giving it peer pressure.
UBREW: Great post and keen analysis.
Great Thoughts of Ronald Reagan
"A tree's a tree. How many more do you need to look at?"
Ronald Reagan (Governor of California), quoted in the Sacramento Bee, opposing expansion of Redwood National Park, March 3, 1966
"All the waste in a year from a nuclear power plant can be stored under a desk."
Ronald Reagan (Republican candidate for president), quoted in the Burlington (Vermont) Free Press, February 15, 1980
"It's silly talking about how many years we will have to spend in the jungles of Vietnam when we could pave the whole country and put parking stripes on it and still be home by Christmas."
Ronald Reagan (candidate for Governor of California), interviewed in the Fresno Bee, October 10, 1965
"The moral equal of our Founding Fathers."
President Reagan, describing the Nicaraguan contras, March 1, 1985
"Fascism was really the basis for the New Deal."
Ronald Reagan, quoted in Time, May 17, 1976
"A faceless mass, waiting for handouts."
Ronald Reagan, 1965. (Reagan describing Medicaid recipients.)
"Unemployment insurance is a pre-paid vacation for freeloaders."
California Governor Ronald Reagan, in the Sacramento Bee, April 28, 1966
"We were told four years ago that 17 million people went to bed hungry every night. Well, that was probably true. They were all on a diet."
Ronald Reagan, TV speech, October 27, 1964
"I never knew anything above Cs."
President Reagan, in a moment of truthfulness, describes his academic record to Barbara Walters, November 27, 1981
"They told stories about how inattentive and inept the President was.... They said he wouldn't come to work--all he wanted to do was to watch movies and television at the residence."
Jim Cannon (an aide to Howard Baker) reporting what Reagan's underlings told him, Landslide: The Unmaking of the President: 1984-88
"Reagan's only contribution [to the subject of the MX missile] throughout the entire hour and a half was to interrupt somewhere at midpoint to tell us he'd watched a movie the night before, and he gave us the plot from WarGames, the movie. That was his only contribution."
Lee Hamilton (Representative from Indiana) interviewed by Haynes Johnson, Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years
"This President is treated by both the press and foreign leaders as if he were a child.... It is major news when he honors a political or economic discussion with a germane remark and not an anecdote about his Hollywood days."
Columnist Richard Cohen
"What planet is he living on?"
President Mitterand of France poses this question about Reagan to Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau.
"During Mr. Reagan's trip to Europe...members of the traveling press corps watched him doze off so many times--during speeches by French President Francois Mitterrand and Italian President Alessandro Pertini, as well as during a one-on-one audience with the Pope--that they privately christened the trip 'The Big Sleep.'"
Mark Hertsgaard, On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency
"He demonstrated for all to see how far you can go in this life with a smile, a shoeshine and the nerve to put your own spin on the facts."
David Nyhan, Boston Globe columnist
"An amiable dunce
Clark Clifford (former Defense Secretary)
"Poor dear, there's nothing between his ears."
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
"Like reinventing the wheel."
Larry Speakes (Reagan's former press secretary) describing what it was like preparing the President for a press conference, Speaking Out: The Reagan Presidency from Inside the White House
"The task of watering the arid desert between Reagan's ears is a challenging one for his aides."
Columnist David Broder
"He has the ability to make statements that are so far outside the parameters of logic that they leave you speechless"
Patti Davis (formerly Patricia Ann Reagan) talking about her father, The Way I See It
"This loathing for government, this eagerness to prove that any program to aid the disadvantaged is nothing but a boondoggle and a money gobbler, leads him to contrive statistics and stories with unmatched vigor."
Mark Green, Reagan's Reign of Error
"President Reagan doesn't always check the facts before he makes statements, and the press accepts this as kind of amusing."
former president Jimmy Carter, March 6, 1984
"His errors glide past unchallenged. At one point...he alleged that almost half the population gets a free meal from the government each day. No one told him he was crazy. The general message of the American press is that, yes, while it is perfectly true that the emperor has no clothes, nudity is actually very acceptable this year."
Simon Hoggart, in The Observer (London), 1986
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Ronald_Reagan/Ronald_Reagan_Myth.html
Great list. People often forget that RR was in the same class as George W. Bush and Dan Quayle.
A couple more that I remember... "People want jobs? Just look at the want-ads." And after the decision to allow the sale of flawed, non-nutritious baby food (banned in the U.S.) to India, "Let the buyer beware."
ezeflyer-
nice work in putting together all those quotes, sad as they are to read. What a piece of..work that guy was. And didn't he once also say something to the effecet of "I hope they all get food poisoning" when commenting on people getting assistance for getting food stamps, or some other program to help the poor? It seems in character that he would...how can some people deny he ever said these things?
Actually Bush's tax policies and the way tax policy is geared to enrich the rich are not at all as trivial as Baker suggests. If tax policy were fair, the rich would not be so rich and powerful as to be able to skew other aspects of economic policy in their favor. And if working people understood enough about economics to not get screwed by relative exchange rates, they would know enough not to get screwed by all the tax loopholes and other tax policy that unduly benefit the wealthy and over-compensated at their expense.
If the working class were smart enough to identify ourselves as working class instead of republican/democrat conservative/progressive we might stand a chance.
Baker makes a couple of extremely important points that so many people do not get. Having the Fed keeping interest rates low is GOOD. It's our best hope of growing jobs in the US. If the dollar would fall in value we would GAIN jobs. So many people here at CD and throughout the nation do not understand these 2 things. Keeping interest rates low until jobs come back and QE2 to hopefully sag the value of the dollar are more important than anything else the Fed can do.
Yeah that's the ticket, instead of putting Dimon, Blankfein et al. in jail, let's reward them with 0% interest rates (remember Glass-Steagall has not been reinstated and the market is an unregulated Ponzi scheme) and QE3. Notice that food commodities are back at record levels? Oil? As I said before Nouriel Roubini has talked about this as well as Dr. Richard Wolff and Dr. Michael Hudson.
Are you shilling for the Banksters, or have no clue about economics and political economy? Or, are you benefitting from the current policies?
Check out Krugman's blog to get a feel for the reality of food commodities and other commodities. You don't seem to understand that real world conditions (supply and demand) are about 99% more important than interest rates and Glass-Steagall in recent commodity inflation.
Krugman? Supply and Demand? You can't be serious after the last few years can you? Please! You seem have a very superficial understanding of economics. Either that or you are sycophantically apologizing for the status quo.
You haven't been paying attention in recent years have you? Instead of believing the pablum, why don't you think critically for yourself? I know they don't teach that in school, but come on.
and lets have wall profit further by putting americans in jail by far than any country on earth to support the privatitized prison industrial complex...all paid for by the american tax payer
yea thank god for free enterprise and small government
Baker was probably remembering all those times Greenspan would hike interest rates every time the economy was "heating up." The result was that unemployment rises and wage demands recede. Also, I agree with you about QE--it is just an effort to extend credit so that businesses will begin to invest in the United States again. Progressives--especially those who are certain they understand economics--often rail at policies perpetrated by their enemies--even if those policies are consistent with the goals of the left. That proves to me that policy is less important than control: both the right and the left want to call the shots. It doesn't matter so much what those shots are.
The Conservative Nanny State
How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer
by Dean Baker, published May 2006
http://www.conservativenannystate.org/
A good read.
Is Baker against patent law? You need patents, otherwise who will invest in R&D (these are big $ amounts) if the results are immediately appropriated by those who did not invest in discovering and developing the invention.
Also, if doctors and can protect themselves from foreign competition, then why not factory and other workers whose jobs are easily offshorable? Or do we just let all of these jobs move offshore until our pay rates match the Indians and Chinese?
I think he is questioning the length of time drugs are protected under patent law. Also, drug companies play games--manufacturing a new drug, marketing it extensively--but upon closer examination it is pretty much the same thing as the drug that is losing patent protection-just an atom here or an atom there's difference. Marketing drugs directly to the population via TV works great for the drug companies--they can get Joe and Jill Schmoe to beg their doctor for the "new" drug--even though it doesn't work better than the old one.
Doctors and lawyers can protect themselves because most people do not want to take a flight to India to get a hernia operation or pay a Lebanese lawyer to work out details of a divorce. Factory workers' jobs are more or less the same everywhere. Outsourcing hits them hardest.
Much drug research is done at universities using public money. That research is then patented by Big Pharma and used to generate huge profits, and a large portion of that comes from Medicare (which is also public money). This is another example of capitalists feeding at the public trough while simultaneously crying "free markets" to those who would allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
Right on, Deano! Maybe some day the population as a whole may wake up and replace the nonsense with some common economic sense!
"Incredibly, the vast majority of progressives go along with this central bank squeeze. They accept the absurd notion that this upward redistribution by the central banks is simply apolitical monetary policy and agree not to criticise the central bank. As a practical matter, there is nothing that Congress could plausibly do in the way of downward redistribution that would offset the upward redistribution from the Fed's tightening. "
Um, maybe it's because a) there are no progressives in our government and b) only a fool doesn't know that without the Fed overtly manipulating every market imaginable right now no fabrication of economic statistics could hide the fact that we are in the middle of a depression.
If most astute observers of the economy can clearly discern the illusory nature of our entire financial system right now, you can bet that our leaders have had people visit them and make sure they continue to support the charade.
The angels of the Lord were sent to the United States to find just 10 real progressives. They failed. The United States was destroyed by the fire and brimstone of it's own greed.
And, conversely, that's just how FEW it takes to change the world. I prefer this method to mass movements. It takes insight though. Literal mystics' "in-sight". Such is the true power of the human potential.
This is a fantastic article with insightful comments. I think the American people have a lot more Heart than they’re given credit for.
More people need to be informed of the details outlined in this article.
Now I know why the Economics 101 class at the State University seemed to have lacked common sense. We were given convoluted macro and micro economic formulas but spent very little time examining the policy making power of the "Central Bank" and the "Federal Reserve".
Motivating people is just a matter of informing the white washed masses.
How can we raise awareness and inform an increasing number of people? For every extra unit of value that they take from the commons, we should inform another 10,000 extra individuals!
Dean Baker keep saying, progressives don't understand this or don't understand that. That is utter bullshit. The so called progressives representatives and Santors understand everything very well, but they prefer keep getting corporate campaign contributions and jobs. Who is kidding who??!!
"They also like the idea of leaving important decisions to the seemingly natural workings of the market."
This preference is not a feature of human nature. It's a trap, a tar pit, where the people are driven by the petro-capitalists, to indulge in petro-conveniences while all decisions are made by big petro-bro!
"On slightly more careful inspection, the inflation-fighting by the Fed and other central banks is actually a policy that is designed to ensure that the wages of ordinary workers do not grow too rapidly."
It's worst than that. It's MUCH worst than that. Both Dean Baker and the feds are working in close cooperation, apparently, to propagate a myth that keeps the people far out of touch with reality.
The reality is this: The elites crucially need inflation, both directly and indirectly.
Inflation directly benefits elites by keeping the people running frantically on their rat wheels, where the elites may drain off the people's energy.
Inflation indirectly benefits the elites as it is a side-effect of their primary racket: creation and abuse of funny munny.
The people don't need credit (funny munny). Only the exploiters, the mega-thieves, the elites, need funny munny to build their fortresses against the march of the torch and the pitchfork.
The lie that elites care about inflation keeps the people confused and ignorant about economics. The racket is spectacular. One of the greatest lies in history. Empire of slaves!
"This is not the only policy lever that progressives are happy to turn over to conservatives."
They aren't progressives. Why would Dean Baker label progressive a hoodlum gang of capitalists, who are merely not-so-extreme-right? It could be that he and his friends wish to hand their loyalty to someone, anyone, who wields poower, but just not so glaringly evil.
We on the far left, in contrast, give no quarter to any triangulating centrist. You can't have your cake and eat it too, Dean Baker! Get off the fence, stop stomping, then patting, the people, and come join us in real solidarity! We got all the soul and all the truth. Like truth? No? Yes? CHOOSE!
It seems the author's got heart, but a few parts of the article could use some work. In particular, in the conclusion: "The policies that have led to the most massive upward redistribution of income in the history of the world go largely unchallenged, while we argue endlessly over the Reagan-Bush tax breaks to the rich." This implies that the tax restructuring isn't a major problem. That's just wrong. Look at how taxes were under Ike. Look at the skew of tax brackets versus the rate of divergence of incomes.
And the Reagan-Bush tax cuts aren't just bad for the poor. They're bad for everyone. Look at where GDP growth went after the Reagan top marginal tax cuts: http://thoughtstate.blogspot.com/2011/02/reagan-tax-cuts-and-gdp.html
the word Reaganomics contributes to the illusion that a given individual, a President, say, is driving national legislation per political process...
how convenient the name used is not that of a wealthy industrialist that is truly driving national legislation per manipulation...
Reagan-Bush tax cuts?
the Volcker rule?
Obama healthcare?
well, maybe, but let's dig a bit deeper, just for shits and grins...
Google while you still can!
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...planetwide rejection of the industrial world...cessation of property ownership and chemical inundation...a return to local living...
take your life back...take the land back...
“There is no way that government interventions will reverse a rigged market.”
Hey, folks, this is Marxism 101, aka Communism for Dummies — the State (aka ‘government’) is not neutral; it is the *weapon* of a particular class, in the case the weapon that the capitalist class uses to suppress workers, the poor, ethnic minorities, ‘sexual deviants,’ and even the vaunted ‘middle class’ with whom CD’s ‘liberal’ commentators seem to be obsessed, and to rule in its own (capitalist) interests.
Those of us who have always known this are glad that some of you have just discovered it.
What you must now discover is that the aforementioned oppressed groups must create their own State to serve *their* interest, to replace the Dictatorship of Capital by the Dictatorship of the Proletariat.
If interest rates, exchange rates and patent policy are the big three levers by which government redistributes income upward, then tax cuts for the rich must be the fourth.
We know the Reagan-Bush-Obama tax cuts created huge deficits, and massive federal borrowing traditionally causes higher interest rates — and interest rate is one of the big three levers Baker cites.
As Baker explains, a higher interest rate means higher unemployment and lower wages. Both of those result in less tax revenue, which in turn adds still more to federal deficits. It's a snowball effect.
Check these graphs to see the (apparent) relationship between tax cuts, deficits and unemployment rates:
http://www.truthandpolitics.org/top-rates.php
http://www.ibew.org/legislative/W080714_JustFacts.pdf
I'm not the economist that Baker is, but I hardly think the Reagan-Bush-Obama tax cuts can be considered "trivial." Far from it.
"since people, especially in the United States, tend to be suspicious of an overly powerful government. "
That must be those who can hardly finish reading one book a year. Love it !!!!